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WE WIN!- White House Reinstates Davis-Bacon

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From a press release from Rep. George Miller, whose office deserves great credit for their outstanding work:

Bowing to pressure from a united Democratic front, a small group of members of his own party, the religious community, and the labor movement, President Bush announced today he would reverse the decision he made in September to remove wage protections for construction workers in the areas affected by Hurricane Katrina.  


After Katrina, the President suspended the 1931 Davis-Bacon Act, which requires federal contractors to pay at least the prevailing wage to construction workers in a local area.  The president's action, which was widely denounced, followed requests from right-wing activists and Republican members of Congress who exploited Katrina to achieve a long-sought ideological agenda item.  


Rep. George Miller (D-CA), the senior Democrat on the House Education and the Workforce Committee, led the effort in the House to force Bush to rescind his Gulf Coast wage cut.

"President Bush finally realized that his Gulf Coast wage cut was a bad idea that hurt the workers and their families affected by Katrina," said Miller. "But let me be clear - the President is backing down today only because he had no other choice.

"The President's wage cut was just another example of his incompetence as a leader in a time of crisis and of his constant need reward the private agenda's of his special special-interest friends rather than attend to the needs of all the people affected by this storm."

The President's wage cut was facing a congressional showdown as early as next week because of a Joint Resolution Miller recently introduced that would have forced the House to vote by early November on whether or not to allow the wage cut to stand. Miller said that Democratic action - coupled with pressure from some members of the President's own party - left the President no option but to reverse his own mistake.

Miller said that until the President formally issues a proclamation reversing the Gulf Coast wage cut, he will closely monitor the situation, and remains prepared for a vote on his Joint Resolution if necessary.

Miller also said that the Bush Administration has taken other actions that undermine Gulf Coast workers - actions that it should also reverse. These include suspending affirmative action requirements and safety standards for truck drivers.

"Americans deserve a lot better than the failed leadership our President has shown in the Gulf Coast," Miller said.


4 Comments

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Nathan and Others - Geo Miller himself has a post with a bunch of comments. 

See main Cafe page for:
Saving Davis-Bacon  By Rep. George Miller (D-CA)
From: TPMCafe Special Guests

Link will take you to Miller  [meant to inlude in my comment above]  
http://www.tpmcafe.com/story/2005/10/26/15496/255
 

Yes, and as I asked on the other thread, what are the various further efforts that need to be made on the Gulf issue.  Some of the remaining travesties are also based on emergency powers, so there might still be reason to pursue a vote.

Miller also said that the Bush Administration has taken other actions that undermine Gulf Coast workers - actions that it should also reverse. These include suspending affirmative action requirements and safety standards for truck drivers.

These labor issues under the rubric of emergency start a whole range of issues about the rebuilding (and bleaching) of the Big Easy.  I was reading an article in The New York Times from just the last day or two about how people can't return to jobs in NOLA because there is no adequate housing for them that they can afford.  So families are staying away (in part because the schools aren't open) and singles who weren't even from NOLA are coming in to get jobs.  This really needs to be addressed with a comprehensive plan put forward by progressives, with Blanco, Nagin, Jesse Jackson and community leaders, all being frozen out of the big decisions, putting together a plan for Democrats to rally around in opposition to the bleaching of the Big Easy.  It is so easy for liberals to be more or less satisfied with a small victory, even as the big picture is being systematically undermined.

Hear, hear. This is a great outcome in terms of policy.

Hopefully, it can be one for politics as well and unions can use this next year as part of the support for electing labor friendly candidates, or at least the labor-friendliest candidate. This can go to the top of some why we need unions lists, too.

 A victory, even one on defense, is still a victory.

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